While tonight's DC's Legends of Tomorrow wasn't as over-the-top and overt with its Easter eggs as was The Flash earlier this week, there was still plenty to look for.

From the first on-camera appearance of Gideon's "face" to some fun name-drops that fans might or might not have recognized, Legends brought the fun along with a tense, spy-flavored episode set in the '80s.

GIDEON

This isn't the first appearance of Gideon, of course -- we've heard her voice in every episode of the series so far. What it is, is the first appearance of the face of Gideon, as seen in Season One of The Flash.

As an aside, we finally did some digging and figure out that the voice of Gideon in this particular iteration isn't Gotham's Morena Baccarin, as it was on The Flash, but Amy Pemberton, best known to our audience for doing video game voice work.

Pemberton was Elaena Glenmore in Telltale Games's Game of Thrones series, and had uncredited roles as both Lady Loki and Sif in Marvel Heroes.

CORRECTION: This is NOT the first time we've seen Gideon's face. She appeared briefly in the pilot episode, and then went into audio mode after that.

"I ALWAYS WANTED TO BE A SPY."

WINGED AVENGER

"Winged Avenger" is a less common nickname for Hawkgirl, since after all Marvel has the market kind of cornered on superheroes who call themselves "Avengers."

Still, it's worth noting that they made the name-drop.

...Also: "demigoddess?" Maybe somebody with better Hawk-fu than I have can help me out here, but while she's usually got her powers from a hawk god, I don't remember she herself being even half goddess.

SVAROG

As pointed out in the episode itself, Svarog is a Slavic deity generally thought to be god of fire and blacksmithing. His more popular/well-known corollary is Hephaestus, a Greek god with similar powers and areas of importance.

He's also the father of Dažbog, a Slavic solar deity.

Worth noting, Svarog's Square or Star of Rus, pictured above, looks a lot like a kind of ancient version of the atomic logo often worn by Firestorm in the comics.

VALENTINA VOSTOK

Valentina Vostok, once a member of the Doom Patrol as Negative Woman, would go on to play a role in international peacekeeping as the White Queen of Checkmate -- a role that seems closer to what she's doing here, unless there's some kind of major accident that gives her powers next episode.

Ironically, in her role at Checkmate, she replaced Amanda Waller, who just died on Arrow.

In the comics, she was Russian, yes, but she defected to the US and stole a bomber jet to do it.

WHITE KNIGHTS

This seems like as good a time as any to point out that "White Knights" in the context of the DC Universe could easily start to feel like a Checkmate reference -- an organization in which Vostok was at one point the White Queen.

BABELFISH

The ingestible translator technology feels a lot like the Babelfish from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. The big difference, of course, is that it attaches itself to your vocal chords instead of your ear, so it's apparently your outgoing speech rather than incoming that's translated...but otherwise, same concept. It essentially reads brianwave activity and spits out audio.

"TWO MONTHS AGO..."

TEMPORAL ANOMALY

Temporal anomalies causing damage or threatening to cause damage to the integrity of the timestream is something the Time Masters and Linear Men have traditionally taken quite seriously.

The phrase popped up over and over again in Zero Hour: A Crisis in Time, in which Hal Jordan had a psychotic break and tried to reboot the DC Universe, using temporal anomalies leftover from the Crisis on Infinite Earths as his starting point.

VANISHING POINT

"Return with me to the Vanishing Point," says Zaman Druce to Rip.

In the comics, Vanishing Point is home to the Linear Men -- and later the Time Masters. It's a point outside of time and immune to any damage that might be done to the timestream, where they and their agents can plan their moves and repair damage unmolested.

It's also where Rip Hunter grew up, as eventually it essentially becomes property of Booster Gold, and since Rip is his son, that's where Booster elected to raise him for the most part.

TIMECOP & ROCKY IV

Rocky IV, which would have been in theaters for a while before Mick Rory told a Russian soldier that he was going to "go Rocky IV on your ass," featured Sylvester Stallone's iconic boxer squaring off against Ivan Drago, a 'roided-up Russian superboxer who killed Apollo Creed in the ring.

Timecop, which Rory called Zaman Druce, was a 1994 film featuring Jean-Claude Van Damme as somebody who polices the timesteam.

CANARY'S OUTFIT

That blue-and-black number feels a little bit like a wink and a nod to the one Canary wore in Justice League International in the '90s.

On the one hand, they aren't that similar but on the other hand, considering how dated the costume itself is and how loosely most such costumes are adapted to the screen, I feel like just the matching color scheme and placement of the stripes is enough to call it a likelihood.